do you mean the ones on Disney discs? i have a BDP-S300 and i just press the Top Menu button when they come on and it automatically skips them to the loading screen. i would have thought the 350 would have a similar button?

do you mean the ones on Disney discs? i have a BDP-S300 and i just press the Top Menu button when they come on and it automatically skips them to the loading screen. i would have thought the 350 would have a similar button?

I have an S550 and when I want to skip the previews all I have to do is press the Top Menu button also.

If the [top menu] button fails, multiple presses of the [skip] botton usually works.

That usualy work's well for me also with my Samsung.

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If the [top menu] button fails, multiple presses of the [skip] botton usually works.

Yes, but when using the "Skip" button you still have to wait for each preview to begin before you can hit the button to skip to the next preview (if there are 5 previews you can't just press the "Skip" button five (5) times, you actually have to wait for each preview to begin before pressing the "Skip" button to advance to teh next preview/preview screen).

Pressing the button without waiting for the preview to begin will not do anything except slowly wear-out the "Skip" button and the batteries in the remote. This has been the case with my Sony BDP-S301, Sony BDP-S500, as well as my (Sony) BDP-S550.

Strange. I press the [skip] button multiple times on my S300 and it does skip a few. Remember, the players still have (very) small key buffers. May vary from player to player and depend on how the java is encoded.

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yea this can be annoying, i was watching WALL-E a few days ago, the film froze halfways through, i had to power off/on the player and waiiiitttt until the previews finished just to get into the main menu, skip buttons did nothing

1. For most discs, press one or the other of your menu buttons. For Columbia discs, you usually have to skip through the previews.

2. Why does everyone think that just because a DVD is able to resume that a Blu-ray should also do so? A DVD resumes because it's easy for the player to know where the laser transport is parked.

To reload a Blu-ray with extensive Java menu content the disc has to be reloaded from the start so that the menus will work. If they didn't do this, your pop-up menu wouldn't work. As with DVD (which didn't have a resume feature on 1st Gen players) I'm sure this is something which will eventually be implemented - but only after the players start being made with some form of caching the buffers to some sort of permanent memory. I'm not sure how much RAM is being used to run those menus and your movie, but my gut tells me it's more like trying to cold-boot your PC running Windows than it is just turning on a CD player. Unless your OS is hibernating on the hard drive, it doesn't just pop back up and resume where you left it.

hg

Quote:

Originally Posted by Magnum007

Hi,
Has anyone figured out some of the following:

1. A way to go directly to the Menu and to bypass all those (sometimes up to 10 of them) REALLY ANNOYING previews that are on Blue Ray Discs?

2. Have the blue ray player 'remember' where you stopped the movie so that when you turn it on, you can start at the point you stopped (and thus avoid the annoying previews mentioned in #1)?

yea this can be annoying, i was watching WALL-E a few days ago, the film froze halfways through, i had to power off/on the player and waiiiitttt until the previews finished just to get into the main menu, skip buttons did nothing

Yeah, the first time I played WALL-E the film froze and I had to reload. Very annoying!! I cleaned the disc (even though it was straight out of the case) and have not had another problem after watching it 4 more times...kids really like it. This should probably be in another thread but I couldn't resist the comment.

Lionsgate Blu-rays do not allow the use of the top menu button during the previews. You have to manually skip each one with the next chapter button. They are also the worse offender in that they are one's that have the most trailers that play upon startup.

Everyone complains about preveiws in the theater, yet if it wasn't for preveiws how would you know if a movie would be good or not? Preveiws give you glimpses of films to come, plus it makes it so you don't miss part of the actual movie if you are late. Me, I have no problem sitting through preveiws. Or if it's on a Blu Ray, I can start the movie and then go make popcorn, go to the batroom, etc....., with out feeling rushed.

Everyone complains about preveiws in the theater, yet if it wasn't for preveiws how would you know if a movie would be good or not?

That's not something I need to find out every time I watch the movie.

Also, I'm coughing up serious cash for the movie, not previews.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Spartan54

Preveiws give you glimpses of films to come, plus it makes it so you don't miss part of the actual movie if you are late. Me, I have no problem sitting through preveiws. Or if it's on a Blu Ray, I can start the movie and then go make popcorn, go to the batroom, etc....., with out feeling rushed.

Sounds like you're one of those people who is satisfied with the world as it's presented to you. Even if the presentation is made by people without your best interests in mind.

What if every time you tried to start your car, your radio came on and played advertisements for every other model the manufacturer made that year?

And did it even after you'd owned the car for five years? For other five year old cars?

You could go outside, start your car, then go make coffee, go to the bathroom, etc. etc.

1. For most discs, press one or the other of your menu buttons. For Columbia discs, you usually have to skip through the previews.

2. Why does everyone think that just because a DVD is able to resume that a Blu-ray should also do so? A DVD resumes because it's easy for the player to know where the laser transport is parked.

To reload a Blu-ray with extensive Java menu content the disc has to be reloaded from the start so that the menus will work. If they didn't do this, your pop-up menu wouldn't work. As with DVD (which didn't have a resume feature on 1st Gen players) I'm sure this is something which will eventually be implemented - but only after the players start being made with some form of caching the buffers to some sort of permanent memory. I'm not sure how much RAM is being used to run those menus and your movie, but my gut tells me it's more like trying to cold-boot your PC running Windows than it is just turning on a CD player. Unless your OS is hibernating on the hard drive, it doesn't just pop back up and resume where you left it.

hg

That's a great explanation. Now it makes more sense to me, as to why it doesn't work. I knew that BD-J discs required bookmarking, but now I know why.